 Alright, well, dear virtual guests out and out along on whatever time zone you may have been, and all of you who have been here in this room today, it's been amazing to see the engagement, the interest, the efforts, the conversations, and more broadly the engagement from this community. So thank you all for participating. We've got a couple last things to do here. I would really love to call out some of the takeaways that you're going away with from this. I've already gotten one from our Slack channel, which is that there are lots of efforts going on, and BTF Gen addresses some of the issues of handling different kernel structures in different kernels while making it shipable. So there's lots of efforts to make EBPF development more streamlined, more able to be engaged with. So that's one possible takeaway to take from this. I would love to know others. So Liz is out there with a mic, raise hands, talk to us about what you saw today and what you really want to take away from this. And maybe also how you want to see all of these communities evolve. Come on. It takes a community. Somebody raise a hand. I have no shame. I'll stand up here forever. There you go. Thank you. Yeah. It was amazing to see the breadth of the community, and I'm really wanting to see it becoming even easier for the end users for maybe for the kernel hackers to use these types of technologies. And we are approaching that. That's very nice to see. I love the efforts between zero to one and then one to 10. And I feel like EBPF is a sort of in the one to 10 space right now. And it's where we start adding momentum to this. And we've got a comment from Richard. Oh, and the earlier comment was from Barun. So thank you, Barun. Richard says, my takeaway is to lean in more. EBPF is the future. Maybe. I love the qualifier on the end, because it's true. When we go out and look in tech every day, we have to estimate and say, I think this is where it's going. And then, because this is open source, we get to guide it. So if we think that EBPF is the future, we figure out where the future is and we take EBPF there. Okay. More comments. Oh, we've got one over here, Liz. Thank you. Okay. My running in today. Yeah. You don't need to run. We've gotten plenty of steps, even just getting in here this far. All right. Thank you. Yeah. Thanks to all of you for the day. It was really, really good. And I had to choose between Wazem and the EBPF, and I was really sure. I mean, I'm happy that I choose EBPF because my feeling was right. There is much potential. And me as a not contributor, but somebody who wants to implement it in the company, I see much potential, so Bumblebee and the other presentations were really great. And thanks for this. So my choice was right to come here. I am so happy to hear that. I also struggled with the Wazem Day versus EBPF, but someone handed me a microphone, so my choice was made. That's awesome to hear. And can we sign you up for a future user talk? What do you think? Okay. Yes. Yes. Yes. We have a future user talk. That's great. All right. Other takeaways, specific things. So we've got a user that's excited about this. We're seeing lots of ways to lean in and learn more. Oh, we've got another. Plus one to that. There's so many cool tools and projects that we could just get our hands on where to get started, right? Yeah. Like just the panel talked about, like, how can you actually get started without even writing EBPF or, you know, doing those kind of things. So I thought that was pretty cool. Yeah. You know, at least to get started. We really wanted this day to cover all levels, so people who were curious all the way up to people who want to, you know, argue the finer points of kernel tuning. I have a neat call out here. So Thomas, thank you for mentioning this. We need to make a big shout out to the actual creators of EBPF, Alexi, Starove. Oh, this is going to be troubling. Give me one moment, Starove, Tiva, and Daniel Borkman. So apologies, Alexi, for borking your name, but I'll do it on behalf of Daniel Borkman for us. Other comments from out in the world, the three-dimensional world, sorry, the virtual world I'm watching here. More comments. Somebody's excited about a project or has an idea for a new project. What do you think? You're all just waiting to go to the happy hour, aren't you? Oh, we've got a question here. Or votes for happy hour. I'm not sure. OK, we'll start with a question here, and then I see one more in the back. It's not a question. Oh, I mean, sorry. It's a takeaway. You're right. It's not even about the day, because I am from Colombia. And I didn't see many people here from my country. But when I talk with people around me or partners in Colombia, and I talk about, you know, something about EVPF, everybody says, no, what is? Anybody knows? Anybody don't know what is? So for me, it was great, all the knowledge that I take from this day. And thank you. Thank you for the. You're welcome. And this gets to be your opportunity to go back to Colombia and share everything that you've learned, get people excited about it, and convince people to participate in the community, participate online, participate with us. If they're able to join us in person, this open source world, we really want to get more people in. And you're right, Colombia and South America, broadly speaking, is not as well represented as it could be in open source. And we would love to find ways to make inroads there. Actually, I was just talking to someone about communities in Latin this morning. All right. We had one more back here. Yes, thank you. Yes. So I think what I watched here is that our EVPF is getting more and more integrated into the observability stacks everywhere. So really going to someone already told to this end user. And another point, I was a bit sneaking also into other sessions, for example, on the telco. And also there we see a lot of EVPF. So I think the while we have been in the last years watching a lot of moves towards the cloud providers where we may be lose also with their service, the access to the Linux kernel. But with the edge, this is again gaining traction. So I think there will be a lot happening also on this level from what I was able to see here. Yeah, I think you're right. We're seeing the way compute behaves and is consumed change. But with edge devices, with embedded devices, with all of that, we have a new frontier, so to speak, more future. I've got one more virtual comment here. We've got to really enjoyed all the talks. Thank you, Richard. I enjoyed them as well. And thank you to all the speakers, virtual and in-person. This is not a small task to do. And especially two years out of practice, it's not an easy thing to stand up here. You have another comment in the three dimensions? Yeah, hi. I'm from Google. And we actually adopted Celium as our data plane, which we're running today on the Edge and GKE and Anthos. And I'm actually very excited with what happened and what was covered today with the community, as well as the talk from IKEA and the way we can compile once and on everywhere. So overall, I'm very excited. I think we are looking at some more ways of making EPP of more platform style. So I hope to see that kind of work coming along in next one year. I can't guarantee a year. This is open source. If you want something done in a timeline. You bring your engineers. Yeah, exactly. So we are working on it together. That's awesome. Oh, I'm so happy to hear that. It's lovely to hear the excitement, the interest, the investment. Hearing an investment in EBPF is also super striking. I had one more virtual comment here. So the rest of you in three dimensions, stick up your hands if you want another takeaway. Thomas says, Thomas Graff says, I'm super thrilled about the many conversations that have followed the impromptu EBPF security model session. We have organized a collaboration session between several end users and the technical EBPF steering committee. So let's also give a big shout out to Levi for having that impromptu security discussion. So let's give him a round of applause. And then I'll share a tiny ask in there. Someone took a photo of Levi and Tom. And Levi wants to prove to his family he's still alive. So if you could send him the photo or throw it into this Slack channel, that would be awesome. Is there anyone else who's up here and has or in three dimensions with more comments takeaways? I think I have one more in here. Oh, I have. Yes. Oh, Andrew Randall, thank you. Andrew Randall says, thank you and kudos to Sarah Novotny and Liz Rice for being awesome emcees today. So thank you for my compatriot. Thank you, Andrew. All right, well, that's a lovely note. And I haven't seen anyone jumping up and down yet, saying, no, no, I missed my point. So thank you all for joining us. Thank you all for being an active, engaged, excited community, thinking about EBPF, and figuring out that the future is here, but it's not evenly distributed. So help us distribute EBPF into the world. And we'll see you at the happy hour. It's out on the plaza in the sunshine. Yeah, I just want to say, this has been a fantastic day for kicking off conversations. We have the rest of the week to carry on those conversations and to meet each other and take this whole thing forward. So really excited that you're all here. And it's going to be a great week. And it is just the beginning. So thanks, everyone. Have a great afternoon. See you.